China Daily (Hong Kong)

New policies aim to foster fairer market

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

China will practice list-based management for all items requiring administra­tive approval, to regulate the exercise of power and provide more benefits for enterprise­s and more accessible services to the public, the State Council executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang decided on Tuesday.

The meeting also decided to implement category-based management of corporate credit risks to make oversight fairer and more efficient.

“Both decisions are aimed at fostering a market-oriented, lawbased and internatio­nalized business environmen­t, continuing to deepen the reform of government functions and lower government­imposed transactio­n costs, which are of great significan­ce,” Li said. “They are also required by the urgent needs at present, as market expectatio­ns now are relatively weak.”

The meeting adopted the List of Items Requiring Administra­tive Approval Stipulated by Laws, Administra­tive Regulation­s and State Council Decisions (2022 Edition).

The meeting required all provinces, cities and counties to finish compiling their own lists of items by the end of the year. The essential informatio­n covered by the lists should be broadly uniform across the country to ensure that the same approval item will be processed according to the same standards in different regions.

No administra­tive approval will be required or implemente­d on any item outside the lists.

“Lower and predictabl­e government-imposed transactio­n costs will enhance public confidence in the market and better unlock market vitality and social creativity,” Li said. “Rolling out these two policies now is enabled by the groundwork laid in the past.

“We must stringentl­y implement list-based management and ensure that market players are not disturbed over any item outside the lists, so that they can compete on a level playing field in an open and transparen­t market environmen­t,” he added.

To foster a market climate of honesty, good faith and fair competitio­n, category-based management of corporate credit risks will be pursued in accordance with laws and regulation­s. Well-calibrated regulatory measures, including oversight conducted through the random selection of inspectors and inspection targets and the prompt release of results, will be adopted to ensure that regulation will make entities of bad faith pay the price.

“Credit is the cornerston­e of a market economy. Regulation will not stand in the way of honest businesses. Market entities of bad faith or with a poor credit record will face more frequent and stringent regulation and supervisio­n,” Li said.

The proportion and frequency of sampled inspection­s will be reduced for enterprise­s with low risk, while those with high risk or poor credit records will face targeted, increased random checks and on-site inspection­s.

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